FOR MISS PROFESSOR

Proposal of the Suppression Bill

The Unites States proposed Suppression Bill is a bill that is up for a vote to be passed in to law. The Suppression Bill is proposing that there be a temporary sterilization procedure that can be either implanted or an injection given at birth or a prepubescent age. If this bill is to pass then the implants would be given to all. Keep in mind that this is only temporary and that a petition may be filed to have this reversed. For the petition to be granted an individual or preferably a family unit would need to complete several things. An extensive set of parenting classes would have to be completed, financial training, substance abuse checks, along with a petition for sterilization reversal. While this bill may seem to be restrictive it is all in the prevention of harm and neglect to children and the desire to help make people that desire children to be as prepared and educated as possible.

Pollution is at an all-time high, the U.S. population is over 326,000,000, foster cares are over run, hundreds of thousands of children are put up for adoption every year, and abortions equal more than 600,000 each year. It is time that a solution is found to assist in raising healthy, happy children. The new Suppression Bill is just the way to achieve healthy, stable families that are fully prepared for what is to come.

Some may argue that the Suppression Bill is one sided and that it simply wants to prevent families from having children, but this is not the case. This bill is looking out for the welfare of future families and children.

On any given day, it is reported that there are over 400,000 children in the U.S. foster care system. This staggering number is caused by many different variables. With the Suppression Bill these variables would be greatly reduced. A young girl who gets pregnant because she was never educated on ways to prevent it, a family that struggles with drug or alcohol addiction, a dad who can’t seem to control his anger…these are all variables that could be addressed with the training and coaching that the Suppression Bill would provide. With the requirement of parenting classes, marriage and financial counseling, and substance abuse checks, it is expected that the variables that cause the high numbers in foster care would diminish.

Abortion is yet another side effect of unplanned pregnancy. While abortion rates have decreased over recent years, it is still sadly over used as a birth control afterthought. Over 600,000 reported abortions were performed in 2016. It is likely that the majority were due to unplanned pregnancies. With the passing of the Suppression Bill this would stop that cause of abortion. It would be likely that there might still be abortions due to problems in a pregnancy or even pregnancies due to rape after the sterilization chip was removed or the injection reversed, but the extreme number of abortions would disappear.

The lack of finances, not being emotionally prepared for life, or having to many children are just a few of the reasons that more than 100,000 children are adopted in the U.S. each year. With that being said, we are ultimately brought back to unplanned or accidental pregnancy as our main reason. Even though adoption rates are in the hundreds of thousands each year, the Suppression Bill could help answer this issue as well. Parents that go through all the trainings and that desire to file a petition have thought about having children, therefore it isn’t unplanned. The number of children being put up for adoption would greatly decrease or even be nonexistent.

Voting to approve the Suppression Bill would greatly improve the family units and the quality of life for the children that are brought into this great nation. This bill would take the burden of children that are awarded to the state off the taxpayers, the support from the state for families that have too many children and can’t support them would also decrease. This would leave a surplus in the economy as well. No more sad commercials about starving children and broken families.